Psychology news

Carrots trump sticks for fostering cooperation

A new study shows that rewarding people for good behavior may be better at promoting cooperation than punishing them for offenses when reputations are at stake.

When it Comes to Laying Blame, Bias Gives Master Minds a Pass

People generally assign blame to direct agency rather than the indirect agency in control due to decision bias.

Swearing increases pain tolerance

Swearing may increase pain tolerance, which would enable us to withstand at least one form of pain for longer.

Does stress trigger your chocolate habit?

Stress can encourage people to keep choosing the things they've got a habit for, even if that habit is no longer rewarding

The bigger the ego, the harder the fall - how self-awareness buffers against social rejection

People with unrealistically inflated opinions of themselves seem to be less resilient in the face of social rebuffs.

Fear really does have a smell

The smell of sweat from those experiencing fear seems to trigger an unconscious response in the brain.

It's called sfdkshfsk ... Stand back!

We appear to judge things with names that are easier to pronounce as less risky.

Religious prompts make people more obedient

Subliminal religious priming seems to make people more submissive to others.

Does having more competitors lower the motivation to compete?

Our motivation to compete falls as the number of competitors rises, even if the chances of success are the same.

The Trolley dilemma revisited

When it comes to judging the moral acceptability of a person's actions, there might to be something special about whether or not they used their own muscular force, and whether or not they intended any subsequent harm caused.

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